FWIW, the command to do that is:On 11/06/02 at 14:51, Chris Wagner wrote:From a client perspective, could you run it with the option "Leave messages on server" enabled to prevent downloading of messages to machines?I mean, in that instant, would the client just "preview" the message on the server, having not downloaded it, or would clicking on the message itself download to this box.'Leave messages on server' (as in Eudora) generally means that the client does download messages, but does not delete them from the server after they've been downloaded. This can be useful if a user is retrieving messages via POP3 from two different computers (e.g., work and home) and wants to be able to have all incoming messages on both computers. MailSiphon (look for it on VersionTracker) does something that's probably more along the lines of what you're asking about. It can log in to a POP account and display a list of messages -- with subject, sender and size -- without actually downloading the messages. Mailsmith, from Bare Bones, has a similar feature called the 'POP Monitor'. I expect that there are probably other mail clients floating around out there with similar features. You can also do the same thing by logging onto the POP server via telnet to port 110 and issuing the appropriate POP commands manually.
TOP <number>
where <number is the number of the message in the mailbox. That just grabs the message headers. Some POP3 servers don't support TOP so a monitor really has to download all of the messages anyway.
--
Bill Cole
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
#############################################################
This message is sent to you because you are subscribed to
the mailing list <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>.
To unsubscribe, E-mail to: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To switch to the DIGEST mode, E-mail to <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To switch to the INDEX mode, E-mail to <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Send administrative queries to <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
